Eclectic Magazine, and Monthly Edition of the Living Age, Volume 37;Volume 100John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell Leavitt, Throw and Company, 1883 |
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Página 16
... stand the pressure of the sail , so the boys un- shipped it , and took to their oars , pull- ing a long slow stroke hour after hour until well toward noon , when the sun , being most powerful , they laid in their oars and ate greedily ...
... stand the pressure of the sail , so the boys un- shipped it , and took to their oars , pull- ing a long slow stroke hour after hour until well toward noon , when the sun , being most powerful , they laid in their oars and ate greedily ...
Página 17
... stand still . By the light allowed by the clouds he saw that they were surround- ed on both sides by breakers - great curling masses of water , whose crests shone phosphorescent and pale , and whose sides were moving sea - caverns ...
... stand still . By the light allowed by the clouds he saw that they were surround- ed on both sides by breakers - great curling masses of water , whose crests shone phosphorescent and pale , and whose sides were moving sea - caverns ...
Página 20
... standing well to one side of their master . His irresolution was but momentary , and summoning James in a hoarse voice to stand aside he again ad- vanced . To this the lad responded by cocking his rifle and retreating slowly . His eyes ...
... standing well to one side of their master . His irresolution was but momentary , and summoning James in a hoarse voice to stand aside he again ad- vanced . To this the lad responded by cocking his rifle and retreating slowly . His eyes ...
Página 33
... stand and allow for those exaggerations which we permit to a writer of fiction . It is only the English reader who is in danger of being misled . He may for- may for- get what the American reader knows , that there are plenty of public ...
... stand and allow for those exaggerations which we permit to a writer of fiction . It is only the English reader who is in danger of being misled . He may for- may for- get what the American reader knows , that there are plenty of public ...
Página 40
... stand why other people do not join , do not keep such an important matter from falling into these professional hands ? Why do not public - spirited men , whose motives are above suspicion , become candidates for the various offices and ...
... stand why other people do not join , do not keep such an important matter from falling into these professional hands ? Why do not public - spirited men , whose motives are above suspicion , become candidates for the various offices and ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volume 40 John Holmes Agnew,Walter Hilliard Bidwell Visualização integral - 1857 |
Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volume 18;Volume 81 John Holmes Agnew,Walter Hilliard Bidwell,Henry T. Steele Visualização integral - 1873 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
admiration Amélie appear Arcturus Aristotle asked beautiful believe better called character comet Cymbeline dark death divining rod doubt Edgeworth effect England English ensilage Esther Johnson existence eyes face fact feel Flushington French Gambetta give Goethe Guiderius hand heard heart human humor Iachimo idea Imogen James John Brown Kemble kind la Harpe lady less light lines living look Lord Madame marriage matter means ment mind Miss Monsieur Morocco nature Nellie never night once Ottoman poetry party passed pict Pisanio poems poet poetry political poor Portuguese Posthumus present prison round Scheveningen seems seen sense Siberia side soul speak spectrum stars story supposed Swift Tangier tell thee things thou thought tion told truth turned voice whole words writing young